Levittâs Summer Concert SeriesThe Denver Barn Party featuring Chris LaneSaturday, September 28th, 2024All Ages | Rain or Shine Doors Open: 5:00 PM | Show Start: 6:15 PMTickets on-sale nowSTANDING ONLY IN LOWER BOWL PIT - NO CHAIRS OR BLANKETS PERMITTEDThe Denver Barn PartyOne of Denverâs hottest charity events â featuring top-tier country music stars on a large stage â the 2024 Denver Barn Party sponsored by Schomp Ford will host thousands of guests from all over the Front Range. Even better, all the money raised from this event supports underprivileged children in Colorado.Our 2024 event brings headliner Chris Lane â iHeart Radio and ACM Nominee â to the Denver Barn Party! Itâs another big act and weâll be able to host more than 6,000 guests at Levitt Pavilion Denver under the stars. Supported by 98.5 KYGO, plan for a sold-out show! Recent Denver Barn Party headliners include Dustyn Lynch, Billy Currington, Chase Rice, Chris Janson, Midland, and Michael Ray.Chris LaneIntroducing âa decidedly more country soundâ (MusicRow), Chris Lane is launching his next chapter with current chart-rising single âFind Another Barâ featured on his latest EP From Where Iâm Sippinâ(Red Street Records/Voyager Records). With a spree of releases in 2021 and 2022, Laneâs catalog expanded with hits like âDancinâ In The Moonlightâ with Lauren Alaina, âHowdy,â âStop Coming Ovwer,â âSummer Job Money, âFill Them Boot,â âAinât Even Met You yet,â MIXTAPE: Vol. 2smash âSmall Town On Itâ with Scotty McCreery, plus Dustin Lynch summer jam âTequila On A Boat,â all adding to his 2.2_ BILLION total career streams, three #1s â2X PLATINUM âBig, Big Plans,â 3X PLATINUM âI Donât Know About You,â and PLATINUM âFixâ âand five certified singles including 2X PLATINUM âTake Back Home Girlâ with Tori Kelly. The Kernersville, NC, native has appeared on Macyâs Thanksgiving Day Parade, TODAY, The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon, Late Night with Seth Meyers, and CONAN, and was featured in PEOPLEâs 2019 Sexiest Man Alive issue. Heâs scored nominations at iHeartRadio Music Awards, ACM Awards, and Radio Disney Music Awards. Lane has previously shared the bill with A-list acts like Florida Georgia Line, Brad Paisley, Dan + Shay, and Kane Brown. Lane will return to the road in 2024 with his FIND ANOTHER BAR TOUR: COLLEGE EDITION.Ray FulcherâWhen I left Harlem, there was a moment on the way to Nashville, three hours up the road, where I asked, âWhat are you doing? Why are you the way you are?âHome, everybody I cared about in the world was there...Even when you have the dream, you have that foundation. But then, I just kept going.âRay Fulcher is a lot of things. National Barrel Racing Horse Association 18 and Under Finalistat 12... Master of Social Sciences and Education... University of Georgia Bulldogs football staff, working with the Quarterbacks on the field... Car Salesman... ATV Parts & Service Manager... Son, friend, (ex)boyfriend, music lover... And he was very good at all of them. But there was this one thing. Music. The kid who always turned the radio up when âOcean Front Propertyâ came on, in spite of his fatherâs admonition âI canât think when itâs that loud,â would see Eric Church at the Georgia Theatre in Athens, Georgia--and a light came on. Alone, no smoke or neon, this artist Fulcher didnât really know played âLightning.â âThere wasnât a line in that song that I could relate to personally,â marvels the soft-spoken artist. âItâs about a guy on Death Row. But in that moment, every single word I felt. I thought, âHowever heâs doing that, I want to make people feel like that, too.â Not that I was pursuing music then, but the power of it just hit me.âLike a lot of young men poised between youth and grown, Fulcher put together a few duos, the occasional band. They played âTuesdayâs Gone,â âRiver of Love,â âLet Her Cry,â âFor What Itâs Worth,â âAll Along the Watchtower.â They drank some beer, had some laughs, wrote a few songs, talked to the people. Typical local band stuff, though the tugging at Fulcher never let go. Even after moving home, he kept playing out, working jobs while he waited for a space to open up at the high school he attended. His life was set: teach social studies, coach football. It was the perfect small town life with all the sweetness, roots and dreams. What else was there? After all, who dreams of 30+ million artist streams without a major label deal? Over 3 billion streams as a songwriter in a few short years? Four #1 singles co-written with one of your best friends? Or playing on some of country musicâs biggest tours? You canât dream that. Impossible. But you can trust the fire in your gut, or the tugging at that âsensibleâ part of your brain. Sometimes, you just keep driving. And when youâre Ray Fulcher, who knew exactly one person in Nashville, who saw a musician heâd met once hit Facebook about being in Nashville alone, you let faith take you where dreams canât imagine. Upon arriving in Nashville, Fulcher got out and played the songwriter rounds.The Commodore Lounge, Belcourt Taps, Whiskey Jam, Revival and the Tin Roof, he hitâem all. It was at the Tin Roof, he spied a kid heâd met the night heâd first come to Nashville to record. Theyâd bonded over loving Eric Church, a shared sense of humor, being outsiders and on fire with the desire to write songs that reached inside of people. Striking up a conversation, they became friends, then started writing songs they wanted to hear and couldnât find anywhere else. Nashville being Nashville, everyone passed on both young menâs songs. Frustrated, they talked it out between themselves. Fulcher recalls, âWe both had enough meetings, sat with enough people who kept saying, âYouâre not ready... Keep working...â They didnât know, but we didnât know either.âI remember us talking, thinking, âI donât know how to play this game, what these people want.âBut we knew in ourhearts they were great songs, were songs we wanted to hear. In one way, we were a couple dudes in an apartment, making stuff up, stuff that wasnât being made. Finally, we decided, âIf itâs not right, itâs not right. But this is what weâre going to do.ââEight of those songs ended up on the 2020 CMA Album of the Year What You See Is What You Get. Eight more ended up on This Oneâs forYou. Four of those songs ââWhen It Rains It Pours,â âEven Though Iâm Leaving,â âLovinâ onYouâ and âDoes toMe,â featuring their mutual idol and influence Eric Church âwent to #1.Thrilled for his friend, amazed at his ringside seat to watch records shatter, doesnât change Fulcherâsdream. Laughing, the easy-going Georgian says of the songs cut by others, âIâve always trusted the process. Lukeâs my friend, and I wanted him to win. If itâs about the song, it should have the best platform and end up with the person whoâs going to bring the most to it.âAnd donât forget: Iâm an artist with my own voice, so recording songs Iâm passionate about, that say things I want to say, they wouldnât be the same. The melodies and how we sing are different; understanding that helps.âTeaming with West Tennesseeâs Jonathan Singleton for production, the pair dug in fora Memphis-meets-â90s country sound. Guitars that sting, hooks that land and story twists that prompt smiles, they created retro-contemporary sounds that are old school, new school and no school country.Whether itâs the quick-word dropping, slow chorus inâWay Outâ that pits the notion of how far out of town one lives with the idea of escape or the vocal harmony-basted swagger of the country living truths inâCompliment,â Fulcher delivers songs that distill a slower way of life thatâs equal parts pride, joy and good clean fun. The euphoria almost rises from the tracks as the words, melodies and darning needle guitars fly by.âJonathanâs guitar just moves over everything, whether itâs a Tremolo part or this quick-picking all over playing,â the high energy performer enthuses. âThereâs that Memphis thing he brings, a little bit edgier, maybe, or dirtier. You know, when weâre in the zone, I think my songs move a little more rhythmically, go a little deeper into the pockets.âCertainly âGirl inItâ leans into the notion of rhythm and punctuation. Whirling through the phases of love and losing, the truth is that no matter what âthereâs always a girl in it. âIn the verse, youâve definitely got that very rhythmic, aggressive tempo going on, but the way the hook lands, it changes everything up. You know, you can take a simple idea, but dress it up with how you drop the words, where you put the melody in the hook.âThat same hand-clap percussive drive marks âDamn If It Didnât Hurt,â the truth-telling take on lifeâs little defeats and how a man growing up faces life, love and disappointment.The turnaround here comes from the reality that the best things in life often come with just enough pain to let you know, but not enough pain that if you could do it all over again, youâd do a single thing different.Those sorts of momentsanchor Fulcher. To him, the more of his own life he can draw into the songs, the more the fans can see themselves in the words. Itâs a principle he and his buddy both embrace, one that allows them to create their own kind of country. Just listen to âBucket List Beers,â a laundry list of the best beers ever consumed; started with Combs, the pair decided the song might better serve Fulcher. Out on the road with Matt Stell, the athletic performer tumbled into the rest of âBucketâ in the Green Room of the Gramercy Ballroom.âThe freedom to just do the second verse let me put my whole life in there,â Fulcher says. âI was on the phone with my Dad the day he retired, and I thought about my cousin coming from the Marines... We all have those moments we want to toast and we want to remember; thatâs what I hope this song does for anyone listening whoâs ever had that moment they wanted to cheers to.âListening to his Black River debut EP LarkinHill Mixes, the songs are instantly recognizable. Heck, they feel like old favorites from the very first listen. Maybe itâs the influences he grew up on. Maybe itâs the desire to lift people up, let them feel what heâs writing. Or maybe, just maybe, the friendly artist who writes songs of misdirection understands that life is what you make it âand lets his songs take it from there. âWe stuck to our guns, and we were right,â he says now. âNothing works out like you planned it, but this turned out beyond our dreams. Iâm thankful we trusted our sense that the songs we wanted to hear, other people would, too.âIâm just so thankful... We were right to stick to our guns, and now I get to take my career to the next level. My dreamâs never changed, only some of my circumstances are a little different.â
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